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Tiền River; Mỹ Tho River; Gò Công River; Bến Tre River; Ba Lai River; Cổ Chiên River; Hàm Luông River; Bình Di River; Châu Đốc River; Bassac River, or Hậu River; Vàm Nao River; Bảo Định Canal; Tàu Hủ Canal; Thoại Hà Canal; Trẹm River; Cửa Lớn River; Bồ Đề River; Ông Đốc River
Ba Lai River; Ba River (Vietnam) Bản Thín River; Bắc Giang River; Bắc Khê River; Bạch Đằng River; Bằng River; Banghiang River; Bảo Định Canal; Bassac River; Bé River; Beilun River; Bến Hải River; Bến Tre River; Bình Di River; Black River (Asia) Bồ Đề River; Bôi River
It has its source in Kon Tum Province and flows into the South China Sea in Tuy Hòa, Phú Yên Province. [1] It has the largest river valley area in central Vietnam [2] and one of the largest river systems in central Vietnam with a total basin area of 13,900 km² or 4.19% of Vietnam's total area. [1] It has a total length of 374 km.
Lô River at the south of Hà Giang town, Vietnam 2005. Lô River at Phú Thọ Province.. The Lô River (Vietnamese: Sông Lô) is a major river of Vietnam.It flows through Hà Giang Province, Tuyên Quang Province and Phú Thọ Province for 470 kilometres and has a basin area of 39,000 km 2 and originates in Yunnan, China.
The water availability in Vietnam is supposed to be 830-840 billion m 3 annually from which approximately 37% is generated on Vietnamese territory. More than 2,000 rivers (with a length >10 km) and more than 100 main rivers belong to Vietnam. 13 of these rivers have a basin area of more than 10,000 km 2 with 10 being
The Đồng Nai River (Vietnamese: sông Đồng Nai listen ⓘ) is a river in Vietnam that originates in the Central Highlands region of the southern portion of the country. It is approximately 586 km in length, [ 1 ] making it the longest river to be entirely located in Vietnam.
It originates in the Loi Mountains of Laos, crossing Laos's Xiangkhouang Province, Vietnam's Nghệ An and Hà Tĩnh provinces and empties into the Gulf of Tonkin, on the North Central Coast of Vietnam, after a 512 km journey. [1] The Cả River zone is classified as 300 km by the Vietnam Geographical Survey. [2]
Map of Quang Tri province, showing Thach Han river. The Thạch Hãn river is formed by the confluence of two rivers which rise in the western highlands of Vietnam; the Đakrông, which flows from the south-west through Đa Krông District, and the Rào Quán, which rises in the mountains north of Khe Sanh.